I've made essentially the same point before on Super User Meta, but this version is more detailed.
If you don't yet have the rep to edit, your edits must be approved by two other users to go through, so you're using their time. Bear that in mind, and don't waste their time on trivial things. Many people are stricter about what what counts as "trivial" on older posts (I'm not, myself, but it's unlikely to be me reviewing your edit suggestion).
As a suggestion here,
- fix things as you come across them in your normal use of the site (don't go out of your way to look for problems);
- fix things that others will agree need fixing (so skip most small typos, especially on older posts, because many people don't care about them, even if you and I do).
Once you gain the rep to edit directly, you're taking up no one else's time, and if you want to fiddle with minor typos that's up to you (I do, because typos annoy me). However, be aware that edits surface posts to the top.
Again, some suggestions,
- on smaller sites, don't do a bunch of edits at once and bump all the new posts off the front page (this doesn't really apply to Stack Overflow, unless you're focusing all your edits within a single tag);
- look over the entire post when editing, including title and tags, and tidy the lot;
- if you edit a question, consider glancing over its answers as well, so the questions and the answers are surfaced only once (this is especially useful if question edits (say RFC 2606 domain names) require matching edits in answers).